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Lit Terms Week One

Lit Terms Week One. conceit. elaborate figure of speech in which two seemingly dissimilar things or situations are compared; an exaggerated metaphor. Rhetorical strategy.

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Lit Terms Week One

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  1. Lit Terms Week One

  2. conceit • elaborate figure of speech in which two seemingly dissimilar things or situations are compared; an exaggerated metaphor

  3. Rhetorical strategy • the management of language for a specific effect such as in sonnets when Shakespeare spends the first nine lines describing the speaker's discontent, then three lines describing the happiness

  4. epic • a long narrative poem about a serious/ profound subject in a dignified style; usually has heroic figures/ heroic deeds in legends; ie Iliad, Beowulf, and Odyssey

  5. satire • writing that seeks to arouse a reader's disapproval of an object through ridicule

  6. accent • the stressed portion of a word

  7. euphony • A succession of harmonious sounds used on poetry or prose

  8. colloquialism • a word or phrase used in everyday conversation and informal writing

  9. cacophony • harsh, awkward sounds used deliberately in poetry or prose; opposite of euphony

  10. assonance • the repetition of vowel sounds between different consonants

  11. End rhyme • a Rhyme that comes at the end of lines of poetry

  12. Blank verse • poetry written in unrhymed iambic pentameter; a favorite form used by Shakespeare; the closest to natural speech

  13. epigram • a concise, witty saying in poetry or prose; either stands alone or is part of a larger work

  14. catharsis • the emotional release that an audience member experiences as a result of watching a tragedy

  15. classicism • the principles and styles admired in the classics of Greek and Roman literature, such as objectivity, sensibility, restraint

  16. Omniscient point of view • the vantage point of a story in which the narrator can know, see, and report whatever he or she chooses; free to describe the thoughts of any character, skip about in time or place, or speak directly to the reader

  17. Resources of language • a general phrase for the linguistic devices or techniques that a writer uses; invites students to discuss the style and rhetoric of a passage through: diction, syntax, fig language, and imagery

  18. alliteration • the repetition of consonant sounds at the beginning of words close to each other, ie, Radiant Rubies, of Redundant Rhetoric

  19. allegory • an extended narrative in prose or verse (poetry) in which characters, events, and settings represent abstract qualities; (many connected metaphors); writer intends a second meaning beneath the surface story; may be moral, religious, political, social, or satiric

  20. apostrophe • usually in poetry-the device of calling out to an imaginary, dead, or absent person, or to a place, thing, or personified abstraction either to begin a poem or make a dramatic break

  21. consonance • the repetition of identical consonant sounds before and after different vowel sounds; ie boost/ best

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